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Anatomical evidence for a countercurrent heat exchanger associated with dolphin testes

✍ Scribed by Rommel, Sentiel A. ;Pabst, D. Ann ;McLellan, William A. ;Mead, James G. ;Potter, Charles W.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
877 KB
Volume
232
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-276X

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✦ Synopsis


Cetaceans possess cryptic testes that lie within the abdominal cavity, that are surrounded by primary locomotor muscles, and that are presumably exposed to core or above core body temperatures. It has remained a question as to how cetaceans produce and store viable sperm at these high temperatures. We offer anatomical evidence for a two layer arterio-venous countercurrent heat exchanger a t the cetacean testis. Subcutaneous veins from the peripheral surfaces of the dorsal fin and flukes carry cool blood from the fins to the lumbo-caudal venous plexus. The lumbo-caudal venous plexus is juxtaposed to the spermatic arterial plexus, which supplies the testis. Venous plexus flow is from the ventro-lateral margins of the visceral cavity towards the vena cava. Arterial plexus flow is from the aorta towards the ventro-lateral margins of the visceral cavity and into the testis. The existence of a countercurrent heat exchanger suggests that cetaceans potentially compensate for detrimental effects of core temperatures on sperm viability and storage by regulating the temperature of blood flow to the testis.


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